Welcome to DukeHealth.org.
Skip over navigation
  • Home
  • Patient and Visitor Info
  • Physicians
  • Services
  • Clinical Trials
  • Event Calendar
  • Locations
  • Health Library
  • About Duke Medicine
    • Honors & Awards
    • Nursing
    • Quality and Safety
    • Careers
    • Giving
    • About DukeHealth.org
    • Contact Us

Quick Links

  • Appointments
  • HealthView Patient Login
  • Quality and Safety
Home > About Duke Medicine > Quality and Safety > Performance Measures > Surgery > Surgery Patients Whose Doctors Ordered Treatments to Prevent Blood Clots (Venous Thromboembolism) for Certain Types of Surgeries
Jumbo Large Regular Text:
Print
Quality and Safety
  • Patient Care Quality and Safety
  •   |   Performance Measures
  •   |   Safety and Quality Awards
  •   |   Improvement Initiatives
  •   |   Contact Us with Concerns

Surgery Patients Whose Doctors Ordered Treatments to Prevent Blood Clots (Venous Thromboembolism) for Certain Types of Surgeries

Share

Note: The chart on this page requires the Flash viewer. To see it, download and install the Flash plugin here:
Macromedia Flash Player

InstitutionRating
U.S. Average198%
N.C. Average298%
Top Hospitals3100%
Duke Raleigh Hospital100%
Duke University Hospital100%
Durham Regional Hospital100%

The rates displayed in this graph are for discharges April 2011 through March 2012. Source: hospitalcompare.hhs.gov
(1) The U.S. average includes all reporting hospitals in the United States.
(2) The N.C. average includes all reporting hospitals in the state of North Carolina.
(3) "Top Hospitals" represent the top 10% of hospitals nationwide. These hospitals achieved 100% on this measure.

What Does This Measure?

The percentage of eligible patients whose doctors ordered treatments to prevent blood clots for certain types of surgeries.

Why Is This Important?

Patients sometimes develop blood clots after they undergo surgery. This can limit blood flow and even cause a potentially fatal lung condition called pulmonary embolism.

Treatment to prevent blood clots may include blood thinning medications, elastic support stockings, or mechanical air stockings that promote circulation in the legs.

What Are We Doing to Improve Our Performance?

Duke has enacted several initiatives to improve our performance. These include:

  • Computerized physician order entry (CPOE)
  • Electronic medical records (EMR)
  • Evidence-based medicine
  • Nursing and physician education
  • Patient advocacy and support groups
  • Patient rounding
  • Patient safety and clinical quality committees
  • Six Sigma
  • Standardized order sets
  • Surgery-specific discharge instructions and patient education materials
  • Surgical care improvement project

More Information

  • See more surgery quality measures
  • See all performance measures
  • Compare Duke to other North Carolina hospitals at NC Hospital Quality Report
  • Compare Duke to regional and national hospitals at Hospital Quality Alliance's Hospital Compare
Contact Us | Careers | Privacy Policy | Make a Gift | Site Map | RSS Feeds | En EspaƱol | Mobile Site | Help
Duke Medicine | Duke School of Medicine | Duke Children's | Duke University
Toll-Free: 888-ASK-DUKE (888-275-3853)
Copyright © 2004-2013 Duke University Health System

About This Page

Updated: Sept. 2, 2011
Published: Mar. 17, 2008
URL: http://www.dukehealth.org/about_duke/quality/performance_measures/surgery/ordered_treatments